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The Ontario Jaguar-OnLine
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This article has appeared in a number of British Car Club newsletters in various forms.
OJOA thanks its author, Keith Ansell for his kind permission to reproduce his report.
Thanks also to Julien Brosseau, for bringing this to our attention.
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Oil Is Killing Our Cars!!!
By Keith Ansell -- Foreign Parts Positively, Inc.
For Keith's website: CLICK
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ABOUT a year ago I read about the reduction of zinc dialkyl
dithiophosphate (ZDDP) in the oils supplied with API approval that
could affect sliding and high pressure (EP) friction in our cars.
The reduction of these chemicals in supplied oils was based on the fact that phosphates reduce
the effectiveness and eventually damage catalytic converters and
introduce minute amounts of pollutants into our atmosphere.
A couple of months ago I had a member of the Columbia Gorge MG Club bring a totally failed camshaft
and lifters back to me that had only 900 miles on them!! I immediately
contacted the camshaft re-grinder (Delta Cam) and asked how this could
happen. They were well aware of this problem as they were starting to
have many failures of this type.
In the past, the lack of a molybdenum disulfide camshaft assembly lubricant, at assembly, was
about the only thing that could create this type of problem. My
customer has assembled many engines and had lubricated the camshaft
properly. Then the bad news came out: It's today's "modern" API
(American Petroleum Industry) approved oils that are killing our
engines: Meaning all flat tappet (cam follower) equipped engines, as
used in all BMC products, all British Leyland products, most pushrod
engines prior to 1980, early Volvos, American high-performance engines
and many others.
Next call: To a major camshaft supplier, both stock and performance (Crane).
They now have an additive for whatever oil you are using during break-in so
that the camshaft and lifters won't fail in an unreasonably short period of
time. They also suggest using a diesel-rated oil on flat tappet engines.
Next call: To a racing oil manufacturer that we use for the race cars (Red Line Oil). Their
response: "We are well aware of the problem and we still use the
correct amounts of those additives in our products". They continued to
tell me they are not producing API approved oils so they don't have to
test and comply. Their oils were NOT the "new, improved and approved"
ones that destroy flat tappet engines! "We just build the best
lubricants possible".
Sounds stupid, doesn't it, New-Approved but inferior products,
but it seems to be true for our cars.
To top this off: Our representative from a major supplier of performance and street engine
parts (EPWI) stopped by to "warn us" of the problem of the NEW oils on
flat tappet engines. This was a call that the representative was making
only because of this problem to warn their engine builders! "The
reduction of the zinc, manganese and phosphates are causing very early
destruction of cams and followers".
They are recommending that, for now at least, there must be a proper oil additive put in the first oil
used on new engines, beyond the liberal use of molydisulfide assembly
lube. They have been told that the first oil needs the additive but
remain skeptical that the first oil is all that is necessary.
Their suggestion: Use diesel rated oils such as Delo or Rotella that are usually available at auto
stores and gas stations. This problem is BIG! American Engine
Rebuilder's Association (AERA) Bulletin #TB2333 directly addresses this
problem. I had a short discussion with their engineer and he agreed
with all that I had been finding.
Next phone call was to a retired engineer from Clevite, a major bearing and component
manufacturer. First surprise was that he restored older British Motor
bikes. The second surprise was that he was "VERY" aware of this problem
because many of the old bikes had rectangular tappets that couldn't
rotate and are having a very large problem with the new oils.
He has written an article for the British Bike community that verify all the "bad news" we have been
finding. Comp Cams put out "#225 Tech Bulletin: Flat Tappet Camshafts".
They have both an assembly lube and an oil additive.
The telling sentence in the bulletin was "While this additive was originally developed specifically
for break-in protection, subsequent testing has proven the durability
benefits of its long term use. This special blend of additives promotes
proper break-in and protects against premature cam and lifter failure
by replacing some of the beneficial ingredients that the oil companies
have been required to remove from the "off-the-shelf oil".
Next question: Now what do we do? From the camshaft re-grinders (DeltaCam) "Use oils rated for diesel
use", Delo (Standard Oil product) was named. About the same price as
other quality petroleum based oils. They have the ZDDP we need in
weights we are familiar with.
From one camshaft manufacturer (Crane): "use our additive" for the first 500 miles.
From General Motors (Chevrolet): add EOS, their oil fortifier, to your oil, it's only an
8-ounce can (This problem seems to be something GM has known about for
some time!). The additive says for break-in only, some dealers add it
to every oil change.
From Redline Oil: Use our street formulated synthetics. They have what we need! Early in 2007
they will be supplying a "break-in oil" specifically for our cars.
From Castrol: We are beginning to see a pattern emerging on older cars. It may be advantageous to use
a non-approved lubricant, such as oils that are Diesel rated, 4-Cycle
Motorcycle oils and other specified diesel oils. They will be supplying
"new oils" specifically for our cars in early 2007.
For you science buffs: ZDDP is a single polar molecule that is attracted to Iron-based metals. The one
polar end tends to "Stand" the molecule up on the metal surface that it
is bonded to by heat and friction. This forms a sacrificial layer to
protect the base metals of the cam and tappet from contacting each other.
Only at very high pressures on a flat tappet cam is this necessary because the oil is squeezed/wiped
from the surface. This high pressure is also present on the gudgeon pin
(wrist pin) in diesel engines, therefore the need for ZDDP in all diesel engines.
Second part of the equation is Molybdenum disulfide (Moly). The moly bonds to the zinc adding an
additional, very slippery, sacrificial layer to the metal. I found out
that too much of the moly will create problems; lack of this material
reduces the effectiveness of the ZDDP.
The percentage, by weight is from .01% to .02%, not much, but necessary according to the chemists.
Now, there is no denying that there is a problem, lack of ZDDP (Zinc Dialkyl DithioPhosphate) in
modern oils kills at least our cams and tappets. There seems to be no known alternative.
Our cars are a small percentage
of the total market and BIG Corporate, the American Petroleum Institute
and possibly government have made decisions that are detrimental to our cars.
This problem isn't going away. The trend today is to lighter weight oils to decrease drag, which
increases mileage. Most of these seem to be the "Energy Conservation" oils that we cannot use.
Redline oil and others are
suggesting a 3,000-mile break-in for new engines! Proper seating of
rings with today's lubricants is taking that long to properly seal.
Shifting to synthetics before that time will just burn a lot of oil and
not run as well as hoped.
The "Energy Conservation" trend
was first led by automakers to increase mileage numbers and secondly
because the ZDDP and other chemicals degrade the catalytic converter
after extended miles, increasing pollution. Most of us don't have
catalytic converters and the mileage gains are not that significant.
Many oil companies may have
products that will continue to function well in our cars. Castrol,
Redline, Valvoline, Mobil, Shell, Amsoil and others have now commented
on my original article and are making suggestions.
Some companies are offering
short lists of "acceptable" oils, others just one. One company has
responded without any substantive information in a two-page "bulletin".
By their account all their oils are superior and applicable. This is
typical of many companies.
Some oil manufacturers are
pointing to metallurgy, blaming poorly built cams and followers. This
may have some validity but the bottom line is that there has been a big
increase in failures with products that have been on the market for
many years but are now having greatly increased failures. To me the
bottom line is, if the lubricants are working there is no contact
between surfaces, it shouldn't matter what the materials used in the
products are, within reason.
On "modern" production cars,
stay with the manufacturers' suggestions.
For any car produced before
about 1990 the owner needs to be aware that the factory suggested
lubricant may have changed and may not be applicable.
Flat tappet, stock, performance
or modified may be affected. MGBs from 1975 to 1980 must choose to
sacrifice the cam or the catalytic converter as an example of how
difficult the decisions are becoming!
Yes, there is more! Castrol
does understand our dilemma and is actively looking into what it can do
to support our cars. We can soon expect to see products from them with
specific application to classic cars.
Red Line will be offering a
"break-in" oil soon after the first of the year. Shell's Rotella will
be good until about June or July of 2007 with possibly nothing after
that date. Delo (Chevron) will also be questionable after the new
"CJ-4" standards come in the middle of 2007.
Now, the important information:
Oils that may be correct for our cars today: (As reported by
manufacturers by 12-31-06, NOTE: many have changed their
recommendations over the last three months!) Castrol: Syntec 5W-40,
Syntec 20W-50, Grand Prix 4-Stroke Motorcycle oil in 10W-40 and 20W-50,
TWS Motorsport 10W-60*, BMW Long Life 5W-30* *= full synthetic,
available only at BMW dealerships Red Line: 10W-30, 10W-40 (Synthetic
oils) Valvoline: VR-1 20W-50 (Conventional oil) Amsoil: 20W-50(TRO),
10W-40(AMO), 15W- 40(AME) & 20W-50(ARO) Mobil: Mobil 1 5W-30 and
20W-50 (Synthetic) Chevron: Delo 400 Shell: Rotella
What we are doing at Foreign
Parts Positively has been difficult to determine but with few options
left, the following is what we are forced to do.
Some of our choices have been
based on the manufacturer's willingness to help and specific reports.
This list may change in the
next months with Castrol and Red Line adding products just for our
cars. Break in: Delo 400 30W (A break-in oil will be available from
Redline soon!) Conventional oil: Valvoline VR-1 20W-50 Synthetic: Red
Line 10W-30 in newer engines, 10W- 40 on older engines. Break-in is now
3,000 miles (using Delo 400 30W) before changing to running oil. Oil
change interval: 1 year or 18,000 miles with Red Line synthetic 1 year
or 2,500 miles with conventional oil (Valvoline VR-1 20W-50).
Thank you to Castrol, Redline,
Christiansen Oil, Valvoline, Mobil, Shell, Standard Oil and Amsoil for input.
We're sure this subject will
continue: Please forward any new information on this subject you may
encounter. We have received some very interesting material from "Mr
Moly" that may be putting molybdenum disulfide (MoS) into this
discussion. It seems that ZDDP plus MoS is the best from the oil
companies' opinion but MoS by itself may be beneficial. Some racers
swear by it. The literature seems to support "Mr. Moly's" position.
Keith M. Ansell Foreign Parts Positively, Inc. www.ForeignPartsPositively.com
Kma4285@msn.com 360-882-3596
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